News

One of the most iconic pieces of art in all of Indianapolis will get a little TLC and a new home at the Indianapolis Museum of Art's campus. "LOVE," the giant sculpture that greets patrons on the ...
Beyond Love, the Robert Indiana retrospective that opens today at the Whitney Museum of American Art, is a long overdue celebration of the depth and breath of the 85-year-old Indiana's work over ...
Robert Indiana's iconic "LOVE" sculpture is back on display at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. The sculpture went on display this week in the museum's Pulliam Family Great Hall. It was removed ...
William John Kennedy met Robert Indiana in New York in 1963 and began taking pictures of him and other Pop Art figures, most famously Andy Warhol. It was clear to Kennedy that this group was onto ...
AP Photo/Matt Rourke Shown is the Robert Indiana sculpture “LOVE” in John F. Kennedy Plaza, ... The signature sculpture was acquired by the Indianapolis Museum of Art on Oct. 2, 1975.
Indianapolis - The Indianapolis Museum of Art announced Tuesday that it will restore Robert Indiana's Numbers 0-9 that now stands on the IMA grounds. The 10 painted aluminum sculptures will be removed ...
In 1968, Manhattan's Museum of Modern Art bought a painting called LOVE — and made artist Robert Indiana famous. It became a sculpture, a stamp, greeting cards. And it obliterated the rest of ...
A retrospective of Robert Indiana’s graphic prints will be coming (appropriately) to the Indianapolis Museum of Art in May 2013. The show is called “The Essential Robert Indiana” … ...
Versions of Robert Indiana's iconic "LOVE" sculpture can be found all over the world, from Tokyo to Tibilisi, Georgia, to a Hebrew version in Jerusalem. The iconic piece of Pop art can also be ...
Robert Indiana’s “Love” sculpture will be put on permanent display outside of the Milwaukee Art Museum at the downtown lakefront after being purchased by an anonymous donor.
The "LOVE" sculpture by Robert Indiana is returning to Milwaukee, and this time, it's permanent. It will be installed outside the east end of the Milwaukee Art Museum and will be unveiled on Sept. 5.